HORIZON-MISS-2021-CLIMA-01-01
Better prepared regional and local authorities to adapt to climate change -
About the connections
The graph above was generated based on the following links
Call text (as on F&T portal)
View on F&T portalExpected Outcome
Project results are expected to contribute to some[1] of the following expected outcomes:
- regional and local authorities gear up their preparations for meeting current and future objectives and requirements when it comes to climate adaptation and climate risk management, in the Climate Law[2] - namely in the new EU strategy on adaptation to climate change[3] - and in the Union Civil Protection Mechanism legislation[4] ;
- regional and local authorities, citizens and other stakeholders improve their understanding of climate risk and have improved access to relevant climate science, data and information from public and private sources and services (e.g. from regional climate projections and predictions, Copernicus, GEOSS and European Research Infrastructures (ERI)[5]);
- regional and local authorities have access to a range of funding and financing opportunities to create an enabling environment for adaptation action;
- regional and local authorities embrace a transformative, inclusive and systemic approach, including societal transformation dimension, towards climate change adaptation action and just transition (in the wider sustainability context);
- citizens and stakeholders are aware of climate impacts and risks, and engaged in the co-creation and sharing of data, knowledge and solutions fundamental for the transformation to become climate resilient (including by building on citizen science, social dialogue and social innovation approaches);
- regional and local authorities adopt an integrated approach to solutions addressing climate change adaptation and climate resilience, namely no/low-regret adaptation solutions with co-benefits of adaptation actions for mitigation, zero pollution, biodiversity (e.g. nature-based solutions), resource efficiency, the economy, society, cultural heritage, human health and well-being;
- regional authorities and communities are equipped to assess adaptation gaps in a systematic and forward-looking manner.
Scope
This action should provide services to support regional and local authorities in their preparation to meet the current requirements of the Union Civil Protection Mechanism legislation, and the foreseen adaptation objectives in the Climate Law, underpinning the new EU strategy on adaptation to climate change in terms of research and innovation, data and knowledge, and capacity and skills.
Furthermore, this action should take stock of past, ongoing and future activities related to climate change adaptation, including innovative approaches to climate adaptation plans to implement a mix of solutions – based on technological, non-technological, and social innovations – and to explore transformative pathways. This would give an indication of best practices and solutions already available, gaps and barriers to address climate change adaptation in a more holistic matter; as well as options for transformative and innovative approaches.
In particular, the action should help regional and local authorities to:
Actions should address all the three main objectives under the scope, tackling some of the specific outcomes (sub-bullets under the three main objectives). Therefore, the consortium[9] should possess the expertise necessary to successfully deliver on the three main objectives. Regional and local authorities are not expected to be consortium participants, but to receive services from the consortium; in other words, they are the target groups of the project’s activities.
The services covered by this topic should be accessible to as many regional and local authorities as possible. The consortium is expected to accompany the authorities and relevant stakeholders through the delivery of the services needed and to the achievement of clear outcomes. Priority should be given to regions or locations with the high vulnerability[10], limited resources and/or low adaptive capacity[11] to climate change impacts. Demand could be higher than what can be supplied within the limits of this action, therefore proposals should include criteria for how to identify the regional and local authorities most in need of these services. These criteria will ensure that a variety of locations are represented, in as many countries as possible, reflecting the diversity in climatic risks in Europe, as well as differences in socio-economic and demographic conditions, and in approaches to mitigating such risks. Such criteria should also take into account the characteristics of the populations concerned and the vulnerability of the locations in order to subsequently understand the effectiveness of the services provided by the consortium.
The project is expected to have a duration of three years. Early in the project the consortium should define a list of regional and local authorities that would benefit from the project’s activities. By the end of the project, the consortium should propose a strategy to maintain the services offered through a platform, entity or partnership with relevant organisations.
Consortium participants should establish synergies with relevant projects funded under this Work Programme as well those originating from Horizon 2020, in particular the Green Deal Call (topics in area 1, as well as LC-GD-9-2-2020 and LC-GD-10-1-2020), should be explored and established during the course of the project. In particular, projects resulting from the calls mentioned above, as well as from Cluster 3 on Disaster Resilient Societies should be foreseen, Cluster 5 on Climate, Energy and Mobility, and Cluster 6 on Food, Bioeconomy, Natural Resources, Agriculture and Environment. In addition, the consortium should draw, when appropriate, upon the capabilities, expertise and data available at the Joint Research Centre in the area of Smart Specialization and urban sustainable development strategies, and the European Environment Agency through the European Climate Adaptation Platform (Climate-ADAPT), the European Topic Centre on Adaptation and the EIONET network of Member States.
The possible participation of the JRC in the project will consist of connecting to the regions, local communities and cities, which in their smart specialisation / local-urban development strategies are interested in the priority themes relevant for the mission.
Cross-cutting Priorities:Socio-economic science and humanitiesSocietal EngagementSocial Innovation
[1]See scope section for more details on the outcomes and objectives to be addressed.
[2]COM(2020) 80 final
[3]COM(2021) 82 final
[4] COM(2020) 220 final
[5]https://ec.europa.eu/info/research-and-innovation/strategy/european-research-infrastructures_en#initiatives
[6]COM(2020) 788
[7]https://www.eea.europa.eu/highlights/citizen-science-on-air-quality
[8]User-centred, open innovation ecosystems based on a systematic user co-creation approach integrating research and innovation processes in real life communities and settings.
[9]Possible participants: experts from a variety of sectors (private, public, academia) with experience on the services to be provided by the topic. National, regional or local authorities could also be part of the consortium if they possess the expertise required to deliver the services outlined in the topic.
[10]Vulnerability is the propensity or predisposition to be adversely affected. Vulnerability encompasses a variety of concepts and elements including sensitivity or susceptibility to harm and lack of capacity to cope and adapt (IPCC, 2018 – SR Global Warming of 1.5 ºC).
[11]Adaptive capacity is the ability of systems, institutions, humans and other organisms to adjust to potential damage, to take advantage of opportunities, or to respond to consequences (IPCC, 2018 – SR Global Warming of 1.5 ºC).
News flashes
The Call HORIZON-MISS-2021-CLIMA-01 has closed on the 14 September 2021, 17:00:00 Brussels time.
1 proposal has been submitted under the topic HORIZON-MISS-2021-CLIMA-01-01.
Evaluation results are expected to be communicated in January 2022.
Opening date: 2021-06-22 (4 years ago)
Closing date: 2021-09-14 (4 years ago)
Procedure: single-stage
Budget: 5,000,000
Expected grants: not specified
This call topic has been appended 2 times by the EC with news.
-
2021-09-17
the call horizon-miss-2021-clima-01 has... -
2021-06-22
the submission session is now available...
HORIZON-MISS-2021-CLIMA-01
Call topics are often grouped together in a call. Sometimes this is for a thematic reason, but often it is also for practical reasons.
There are 0 other topics in this call:
Showing the latest information. Found 1 version of this call topic in the F&T portal.
Information from
- 2024-03-30_14-19-01
Annotations
Events
Events are added by the ideal-ist NCP community and are hand-picked. If you would like to suggest an event, please contact idealist@ffg.at.
Call topic timeline
-
Work programme available
- 4 years agoThe call topics are published first in the Work Programme, which is available a while before the call opens. By following up the Work Programme publications, you can get a headstart.
-
Opening date
- 4 years agoThe call opened for submissions.
-
Closing date
- 4 years agoDeadline for submitting a project.
-
Time to inform applicants Estimate
- 4 years agoThe maximum time to inform applicants (TTI) of the outcome of the evaluation is five months from the call closure date.
-
Sign grant agreement Estimate
- 3 years agoThe maximum time to sign grant agreements (TTG) is three months from the date of informing applicants.
-
Publication date
- 1 year agoThe call was first imported in TopicTree.
-
Today
Funded Projects
Loading...
Project information comes from CORDIS (for Horizon 2020 and Horizon Europe) and will be sourced from F&T Portal (for Digital Europe projects)